Mapping Traffic Flow

Mapping Traffic Flow

Predicting speed: The image above shows the average speed of traffic on California roads, based on historical data. The color green indicates wide-open roads, yellow indicates that traffic is slowing, red represents extremely slow traffic, and black (which is not shown on this map) means that traffic is stop and go. The data displayed takes into account the time of day and the day of the week.

Drivers are always searching for the fastest route–whether they are traveling home on a busy Friday afternoon or rushing to the airport for an early-morning flight. Now Tele Atlas, a Boston-based company that provides digital maps and navigational content, has integrated new trafficking software into its map database so that drivers can find the most optimal route based on speed rather than distance–for any stretch of road at any hour of any day of the week.

“It’s like having an experienced cab driver with you all the time who knows which roads to avoid to find the most time-saving route,” says Jerry Kim, director of global dynamic content at Tele Atlas.

The software was developed by Inrix, a startup based in Kirkland, WA, that provides real-time and predictive traffic information. The software determines the average speed of roadways across the United States based on two years of historical traffic-speed data collected from commercial fleet vehicles; it uses real-time global positioning software and road sensors from the department of transportation. These billions of data points are then run through proprietary software to create a table of historical traffic patterns based on the hour of the day and the day of the week.

The table contains 168 attributes–24 hours for each of the seven days in a week–and each of the attributes has an average speed that is linked to a road segment, which is identified by a traffic messaging code. The traffic messaging code is embedded into Tele Atlas’s maps. When drivers input their starting position and their end position, their navigational device creates a routing algorithm that pulls the traffic messaging codes and then looks up these codes in the data table to identify the average speed of the roadways. This speed is applied to the algorithm, and a color-coded display–in green, yellow, red, or black–of the road segments appears on the device’s screen. For instance, the color green indicates a wide-open road, whereas black indicates stop-and-go traffic. Drivers can also view the highways of an entire city to determine which typically move the fastest. (Click here for an animation of traffic flow).

“I can tell you that at 3 P.M. on Friday on a certain stretch of road in Detroit, traffic is typically flowing at 35 miles per hour–and we have done that for almost a million miles of road across the country,” says Bryan Mistele, the founder and CEO of Inrix. By integrating this information into its map database, Tele Atlas enables drivers, who want to do things like estimate their time of arrival, to get a much more accurate answer than what is available now.